|
Looking For Magic In America, Or, How I
met The Dalai Lama of Tibet
Copyright 1997-1999 "Magic Mike"
(Unpublished)
Meeting the Dalai Lama of Tibet is a lot like Richard
Dreyfus
in "Close Encounters OF The Third Kind." It's like a mental
signal goes out and receptive people pick it up and somehow know
and
are drawn to where they need to be at the right time. Those who are
meant to meet him do, and those who aren't meant to meet him don't. A
monk
told me this a few minutes after I met the Dalai Lama, Tenzen Gyatso,
in
a receiving line with 60 Tibetans, shook his hand, and wished him well.
It's karma. I grew up in Philadelphia and taught myself to read from
newspapers
and a dictionary when I was four years old. I taught myself close-up
sleight
of hand illusions two years later from books at the library. I learned
chess from books at ten, and read all the classics before thirteen. I
read
all the biographies of great scientists, but also all those of famous
entertainers.
With
highest marks in Geometry, Chemistry, and Physics, they seemed like fun
puzzles to solve, I thought science was a place for my career. It was a
hard choice between MIT, Princeton (I drove over after my sixteenth
birthday
to check out Einstein's old office), Drexel, and Penn State. In
1965 I chose Penn State's Chemical Engineering and Physics rocket
propulsion
program because they also had a radio station, and I had studied Top 40
AM radio since I was 13 years old. Deciding I didn't like math, I
transferred
into Broadcasting and began working at college station WDFM, (1st
stereo
FM radio station), where I was one of the first people to play "Alices
Restaurant", The Grateful Dead, and Pink Floyd. (I would later meet
Arlo Guthrie in Eugene, Arlo's brother in Berkley, and The Grateful
Dead
backstage and in their hotel room in Seattle and Hartford.) I
became production director, and wrote and produced a ten week, farce,
cliff-hanger,
mystery, comedy series called "The Adventures Of Super Stater".
I turned in one episode the first week of my senior radio production
class,
taught by the department head, a tough, feared, redhaired, Hermione
Gingold
look-a-like named Lillian "Doc" Preston. She played it for the
class and told me to get out, and not bother coming to class for the
next
nine weeks, she was giving me a grade of A for the term! Ha hah ha ha
ha.
Someone said to me later that year my shows sounded like a group in
California
called The Firesign Theater. Selected for a scholarship intern program
with Westinghouse Broadcasting at KDKA Radio (the first radio station)
& TV in Pittsburgh, I transformed the observer program, writing and
scheduling all KDKA TV's on-air promotion. Upon graduation in 1969, I
became
promotion director at NBC affiliate WBRE-TV (first color TV station). I
left to join my father's company, where I seemed to excel in sales.
However, after three years off the air, I missed
being
creative. I found "Be Here Now"and "The Tibetan
Book Of The Dead". When I was six, while my parents slept
I crept downstairs and watched the TV late show one Saturday night. I
saw
the 1937 Frank Capra classic "The Lost Horizon", fictional
portrayal of the land of Shambala and the Dalai Lama. I felt that I
knew
these monks of knowledge myself, somehow. But then, I felt that somehow
I knew The Lone Ranger too, so, no way, right? The next day, it came to
me that there were books on ancient knowledge of how to fly and turn
invisible
so while my parents still slept, I got on a bus and went to the
library.
The librarian pointed me to the magic section. I guess neither of us
knew
the word "metaphysics". Years later, when I finally learned the
word at the age of 22 years, I found "The Tibetan Book of The Dead",
it referenced the Dalai Lama, and I remembered what I wanted to learn
when
I was six. During a meditational insight in
1972,
I felt I would have a
future
connection with The Dalai Lama of Tibet in the general vicinity of the
Pacific Northwest United States. I had also found Tom Robbins book "Another
Roadside Attraction." I weighed this for two years and decided
to act on it, heading West in 1974, knowing that I would become a well
known DJ and magician,

They autographed this photo
after I met them backstage
at Seattle's Bumbershoot 1984 |

I met them in 1994 at their 25th Anniversary Reunion which opened in
Seattle.
I couched them at rehersal on their lines, which only I fully
remembered,
and they had me make their "computer hat" out of balloons in
the "bozos" skit. |
and would
one day meet The Dalai Lama, Ken Kesey, Tom Robbins, The Grateful
Dead,
The Firesign Theater, Arlo Guthrie, and a bunch of other celebrities. I
told this to friends in Pennslvania, I had know since childhood, in the
50's, that I would one day meet The Lone Ranger, too! By the way, Some
of these things I knew ten, twenty, thirthy years in advance somehow.
I'm
getting ahead of myself, but four years and 3000 miles later I
found
Ken Kesey standing next to me at a February 1976 concert in Oregon,
three
years after that I met The Dalai Lama in Seattle, after driving 300
miles
from Oregon to meet him.
This photo was taken just after an hour after the
girl in
white pants and myself (top right corner of this photo) met the Dalai
Lama,
and the two Lamas to his right, Sakya
Dagchen Rinpoche, and his brother Trinley Rinpoche. We were the
only
ones around. We got out of the car, walked to a door I'm was getting a
strong feeling for, just as the door opens, the two Lamas come out,
hand
us their camera, and ask us to take their picture
with The Dalai Lama. We were the only
ones around. We got out of the car, walked to a door I'm was getting a
strong feeling for, just as the door opens, the two Lamas come out,
hand
us their camera, and ask us to take their picture
with The Dalai Lama. This picture was taken by
a Seattle Buddhist photographer
a few hours after I met took his picture.
I am in the top right
corner
with a white hat, beard, and purple shirt, behind the girl in white
pants.
He gave me a copy of this photo when we became friends after I moved to
Seattle the following week, when I learned that the Dalai Lama's
brother-in-law,
another high Lama lived in Seattle. I traveled
from Colorado to the Pacific
Northwest in 1975, living in a 1947 SilverStreak camper that I had
named,
in large letteres on the back, "The Non-Vibrating DoDo Dome
Spectacular",
from Tom Robbins "Another Roadside Attraction." A ten
years later I met Tom Robbins at a book signing. I made sure I was last
and I did some magic for him and had him sign my treasured copy of "Another
Roadside Attraction." He signed it, "To Magic Mike, who blew
my mind." I met him two more times at a bar and we got to talk for
a half hour over some beers. I met The Grateful Dead at their backstage
door and hotel room, The Firesign Theater in their dressing room, and
The
Lone Ranger, in the mid 80's, in Las Vegas at a Cable TV Tradeshow
where
we both were booth attractions. I have found that I can meet anyone I
want
to by focusing my mind! You can do it too, if
you practice.
I used to practice by mentally saying hello to people with their back
to
me when I was driving, trying to get them to turn and look at me before
I passed them. More on that later later.
However, I didn't know where
any
of this would happen, began dowsing, decided it was time to leave
Pennsylvania
in the last week of March 1974, and drove across the country with $400,
and what fit in my car with a cat. I arrived in Colorado on April Fools
Day and got a job three days later, in the emerging FM radio market,
pioneering
a mix of rock, blues, fusion, country swing, jazz, acoustic, bluegrass,
and Firesign Theater. I
helped start KTCL a new FM station in Fort Collins, which quickly
became
the most listened to station in Northern Colorado. Then I left for
Oregon,
doing the night show on 100,000 watt KZEL-FM in Eugene from 1975 to
1976,
which Billboard
Magazine voted the county's best progressive rock station while
I was there. I began including a lot of Blues mixed with Rock. The
phone
rang constantly. I'd get off at 1:00AM and rush over to a local pub to
listen to Robert Cray Band (when they were just a local group) and
perform
magic for the band and closing stragglers. I left that summer and
camped
4 months my my cat in Washington, Utah, and Colorado's Rocky Mountains.
While visiting family in Scranton in December of 1976, I accepted an
offer
to sell for WEZX-FM, another start-up station. I was made sales manager
the next year. While I was gone, John Belushi came to Eugene, met the
Cray
Band, and stole my look. In the summer of 1978 I
again felt that I needed to be in the Northwest to meet the Dalai
Lama
when he came, so I took a job as sales manager of KIDO AM/FM in Boise.
I left when the owner killed it for a tax write off, and decided to
move
back to Eugene and wait. Everyone thought I was Belushi. I began
to
perform magic for a living, and I saw the total solar eclipse in the
Spring
of 1979. at the replica of Stonehenge, along the Washington Columbia
River.
The eclipse's totality was at 7:50am, and it was supposed to be a
cloudy
morning, but I deduced that it might be clear on the east side of the
Cascade
Mountain Range if most of the clouds would be held back by the cold of
the morning peaks, so I left for the two hour drive and got there at
7:30am.
The stone monuments were in a field on a western plateau overlooking
the
Columbia River. There was one big cloud covering the sun.
I tried to start mentally burning
a
hole in the cloud and saw that a small break might drift over in time
to
see totality. I started to smile as a man saw the "I Believe In Magic"
button I had, with
stars and a comet, and said, "If you believe in magic, get rid of
that cloud!" I said, "I'm working on the problem!", and
just 15 seconds later that hole broke, just as totality totaled! The
valley
below began to ripple and shimmer as rarefied light, sparse rays
escaping
between the mountain peaks of the moon, played with the land and our
minds.
I remembered stories of the past, as the pale yellow glimmer rekindled
old tales and genetic memories. I felt Antiquity! And I knew it
signaled
a big change about to happen. That
September I heard on the radio that The Fourteenth Dalai Lama had
arrived
in the country for the first time (there have been fourteen
reincarnations
of the Ocean of Wisdom and Compassion Lama, found and reinstalled as
the
greatest teacher of Tibet). I followed the news for two weeks until I
tracked
the closest city on the tour. I didn't still think it would happen, and
I was having an ad agency trying to sell some ideas for TV commercials
to a bank. Should I leave, and will I get through to him, and do I
really
want to go now, if it's just a situation of seeing him from afar, IS IT
WORTH IT? I decide
to
throw the I Ching, which I do rarely, so it's meaning isn't diluted. I
got a hexagram that was also the same hexagram of that week of the
Taoist
calendar, beginning his first day in Seattle, AND had the explanation
"Cosmic
Grace Incarnate", which I took to mean His Holiness, so I said to
a friend, I'm going to meet the Dalai Lama, do you want to come along?
And I knew ONE person in Seattle, that I hadn't seen for two years
since
going East, who gave me his address in our chance encounter at The
Oregon
Country Fair, and lived blocks from Seattle's Sakya Dharma Center.
We drove to the first
scheduled
event, got out of the car, and met Tibetan lamas coming out of a
building
where The Dalai Lama was holding a press conference. The lawn and hill
in front of the building was the one I had seen in his mind's eye for
seven
years.They asked, "Would you use our camera to take our picture with
The Dalai Lama? He's just coming out now." I said knowingly, "That's
what we're here for". We
drove back to Sakya Dharma Center and where earlier there was no one, a
few hundred people were in the street. We listened to him over a
speaker,
blessing the Dharma Center in Tibetan. A blanket was spread out because
people were leaving offerings of flowers and incense. I left a tape of
Pink Floyd's 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' and the Firesign Theater's
'W.C.
Fields Forever', after making sure, by asking if he would definitely
receive
it.
The next day the crowd was large
at
the public talk on Buddhism and Compassion. We couldn't get in, and had
to listen in a building over a speaker. Outside I saw a man in robes,
did
a magic trick for him, and related a little of my seven year hunch that
I was supposed to meet the Dalai Lama. It turned out to be Dr. Ajari,
The
Dalai Lama's host. I was invited to a private session with Tibetans in
exile, meeting The Dalai Lama just before his departure.
The morning of the 9:00am
meeting,
my friends slept in, as we were up Friday night until three in the
morning
talking about everything. I ran out at 8:30am, and found my keys locked
in the car. Suburu's are impossible to get in. It happened a week
earlier
to me and took two hours to figure out. You need a curtain rod, to go
across
the inside of the car, to push the latch of the door on the other side.
I ran into the kitchen where we stayed the night, grabbed a curtain
rod,
ran back out and opened it in one minute. Now I found the ignition and
the dome light on all night, and the tank on empty. I prayed. It
started.
I wasn't sure of where I was going. And there was a heavy fog, and I
didn't
know where a station was, I had fifteen minutes, so I just drove.
I found my way there and sat
down.
During the meeting, in which
he
spoke entirely in Tibetan, I just said in my mind, "Hi. Can you hear
me? Was I meant to be here? Hello!" Suddenly, everyone got up. A line
formed and to my wild glee, there I was in it, shaking his hand.
Everyone
had been giving him white scarves, and I didn't know what they were, or
where they came from. When I got to him I said, "This is an unexpected
blessing, and I don't have anything to give you, so may I just say, may
your light shine forth, for a long time." I found out weeks later,
that has been his long life prayer for 700 years. It just seemed what
to
say.
As I walked away I felt like
all
the atoms in my body were vibrating at a high rate of speed, and I felt
tingling all over. I was in shock when the monks from the other day
came
over. I said I was sorry my friends slept in and did not come, thinking
there would be no contact with him. They said that those who are to
meet
him, do. Mentioning
that
I wish I had a scarf, the monk mentioned he was sorry he had missed me
as he gave them out. When a few moments later I said it again, he
pulled
out a beautiful silk scarf with gold tassels, saying to go back in line
and give it to him. I felt that would not be proper, but he insisted. A
bodyguard looked at his watch, and said I'd been in line, and they had
to leave for the airport. An old Tibetan man and family, who had been
been
talking to past family and friends, unseen for years, got in line
behind
me.
As the guard was thinking
about
what to do, the old man put his hand on my back and propelled me past
the
obstacle, and there I was again, in front of that smiling person. I
shrugged
and said, "I have one now." He took it, and put it over my head
around my shoulders, giving it back as a blessing and I have it still.
Then he left. But someone said
not
to leave, because he was coming right back! And I thought, "I've
overcome
every possible obstacle, from a thought in my mind seven years ago, not
knowing when or where, my own self doubt, and the external resistance
of
getting past the red tape of a stranger trying to gain accessibility of
the inaccessible, to shaking his hand and saying hello twice in the
last
half hour and now I'm going to see him again?! A third time in one
hour!
The magician's mind is blown! Totally!! Totality!!!
After the next 20 minute session with him, we
went outside to see him off. The Dalai Lama got into his car and waved
good-bye to people on the right. In awe of the moment, I stood fifty
feet
behind his car as it left for the airport. In that crowd of 75 others,
I had been mentally saying hello for an hour, asking him if he could
hear
me and wondering how I would know if he had! I sent him mental good
wishes
as the car pulled out, and suddenly he turned to look over his left
shoulder,
out the back window, and waved good-bye to me at the last moment.
Numbed,
I waved back, as I experienced The Close Encounter of the FOURTH
KIND!!!!
I went back to my car and the
battery
was dead, wouldn't even click, and I was almost out of gas. For five
minutes
I sat there, giggling aloud, because I had managed to get there anyway,
and I knew nothing could have prevented it. But I had tapped out all
the
energy to do it. Some young Tibetans helped me push-start my Suburu,
told
me a gas station was around the corner, and the car took 11.9 gallons
out
of a 11.9 gallon tank. I have NEVER seen a better trick.
It was Dagchen Rinpoche's sons
push
started me. I was invited to a party that night to celebrate the visit,
where I met Sakya Dagchen Jigdal Rinpoche, a Lama of great wisdom who I
discovered lives in Seattle, and I decided to move there to study with
the lamas at The Sakya Monastery and Center for Tibetan Buddhism, and
have
been in the Seattle area since. Jigdal Dagchen Rinpoche, founder of
Seattle's
Sakya Monastery, is one of the heads of the Sakya sect and his family
were
renown Tibetan abbots, so I met most of the main teachers from all four
schools of Tibetan Buddhism within the next year in the Seattle area.
I
performed magic for the late Nyingma magician Dudjum Rinpoche in the
summer
of 1980 in Seattle, and got to talk to the Kagyu 16th Karmapa in
Portland,
in the fall of 1980 before he died. I met many other lamas, such as my
friend Sogyal Rinpoche, and the late Kalu Rinpoche (I made salt
disappear and
Kulu Rinpoche made the salt shaker disappear) and shook hands again
seven
more times with The Dalai Lama (head of the Gelugpas and all four
sects)
at initiations with him in Seattle, Madison, Vancouver, Pasadena, Santa
Monica, and San Jose.
Each
of these lamas exuded a natural magic that was wonderful to experience,
gave their knowledge freely, and never asked for money. In
1995 I spent time sitting and playing with 4 year old Sonam
Wangdu, Seattle's little reincarnated lama. These photos were taken
in January 1996, just before Sonam left for Nepal, Kathmandhu to run
his
former Tharlam Monastery
as Abbot of 39 monks and nuns, since being recognized my former
teacher,
Deshung Rinpoche, who upon meeting me in Seattle in 1980 said in
Tibetan,
"Tell him he should do magic whenever I'm around!"
I
don't have the ability to embody these masters' teachings myself. But,
I recognize the need to try to learn their practices, in order to be
able
to have a system for trying. So I try to remember when I can. And I
feel
fortunate, that my ability to be in the right place at the right time,
allowed me this chance to get what I can while they are available. I
have
also found that other people are wanting to hear something about
Tibetan
Lamas, or Rinpoches, so if this is some impetus for someone to explore
the dharma of karma further, then it is my pleasure to be of service.
Check
out Deshung Rinpoche's book The Three Levels of Spiritual
Perception,
Jamyang Sakya's "Princess In The Land Of Snows"
(Deshung Rinpoche's niece and Sonam's great aunt), and Bertolucci's
movie
The Little Buddha. The movie was fiction, filmed at the
Seattle
Sakya Monastery where Sonam lived at the time, before anyone knew it
was
real. Unlike the movie, in Sonam's
case there were no other candidates, and Sonam's father was
Tibetan,
the grand nephew of Jamyang Sakya, who was Deshung Rinpoche's
neice.
Sonam's father died from a bus accident before Sonam was two years old.
http://tibet.com/
More
stories about magic,
mind, and Tibetan Buddhist lamas
I recommend thes.
They
are all five star caliber.
Some of the commissions from books on my pages are donated to Tibetan
lamas
and monasteries.
Order these books by clicking on them. A complete list is a
screen
down.

Amazon.com is pleased to have Magic Mike in the
family of Amazon.com associates.
We've agreed to ship products and provide customer service for orders
we receive
through special links on Magic Mike's pages.
Amazon.com associates list selected books and music in an editorial
context that
helps you make the right choice. We encourage you to visit Magic Mike's
pages
often to see what new items he's selected for you.
Jeff Bezos President Amazon.com
Books on metaphysics I have read and recommend. -mm
My
Land-My People, The Dalai Lama
Secret
Buddhism : Vajrayana Practices by Kalu Rinpoche (Vajrayana -
Diamond
Body teachings)
Dzogchen
: The Self-Perfected State by Chogyal Namkhai Norbu (Big
Sky/Mountain
teachings)
Spacious
Path to Freedom : Practical Instructions on the Union of Mahamudra and
Atiyoga by Karma-Chags-Med, Rinpoche Gyatrul, B. Alan Wallace
(Translator),
Karma Chagmei (compassion teachings)
Echoes
of Voidness by Geshe Rabten (Sunyata-emptiness, void teachings)
The
Tibetan Book of the Great Liberation; Or, the Method of Realizing
Nirvana
Through Knowing the Mind by Walter Yeeling Evans Wentz, W. Y.
Evans-Wentz
(Editor) Evans-Wentz
Tibetan
Yoga and Secret Doctrines - Evans-Wentz
Foundations
of Tibetan Mysticism - Lama Govinda
The
Way Of The White Cloud - Lama Govinda
The
Way of the Bodhisattva - by Shantideva,
Princess
In The Land Of Snows - by Jamyang Sakya (my dear friend since
1979)
The
Tao - by Lao Tsu
The
Tao of Physics - by Capra
The
Three Levels of Spiritual Perception : An Oral Commentary on the Three
Visions (Nang Sum of Ngorchen Konchog Lhundrub) - by Deshung
Rinpoche,
Sonam's previous incarnation.
Customer Comments - Customer Review of this book.
Chuck Pettis (crp3@msn.com) from Seattle, Washington , August 9, 1998 A
comprehensive view of life, death and enlightenment I have read many
spiritual
books in my lifetime. This is the most comprehensive explanation of
life,
its purpose, karma and how to attain enlightenment I have ever seen.
Not
light reading, this book not only provides detailed information on
meditation,
worldly existence, suffering, the rarity of human birth, and the law of
karma, but provides powerful meditations and spiritual practices to
help
us increase our capacity for love and compassion and to improve our
ability
to concentrate free from thoughts, so as to attain insights and
ultimately
enlightenment.
|